ISO packs house with a symphonic 'return to forever'
Can you overdo it with a piece that challenges you to cheer and cry at the same time? Music-lovers have Gustav Mahler at 5, wondering if life is worth it. to answer that question for themselves, but the concert experience of Gustav Mahler's Symphony No. 2 in D minor ("Resurrection") for me works out best with years in between in-person iterations. My first exposure to joining a big crowd for such a performance was in May 1987, when John Nelson capped off his 11-year tenure as Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra music director with an interpretation that explictly spoke to his religious orientation: "The sentiments that are in the text are my sentiments," he told the Circle Theatre audience. Certainly the second time I heard "Resurrection" almost effected a match between my sentiments and those of the texts the composer chose — from the folk poetry of Des Knaben Wunderhorn and "Resurrection," an ode by Friedrich Klopstock — plus a huge sup...